R
Robert Latest
John said:Your question practically answers itself.
OK. Leakage inductance is the inductance you measure looking into one
winding of a transformer with the other winding shorted. The shorted
secondary winding (ideally) doesn't allow any flux through it, so the
leakage inducance is associated with the flux that goes through the primary
but not through the secondary.
Naturally any removal of core material would reduce this inductance simply
because any conductor loses inductance when it has less highly permeable
material in its vicinity. But tell me a way of removing material that
doesn't degrade, at the same time, the coupling between primary and
secondary windings. After all, simply removing the core of any transformer
will reduce the inductane of any winding (secondary shorted or not), but
what you're left with may not even qualify as a transformer any more.
So the task is: Come up with a transformer configuration in which material
can be removed from the core so that the leakage inductance goes down while
the coupling between the windings is not degraded. You claim to have a
solution. Let's hear it.
robert